Windows 8.1 Could Get Some Love

Microsoft on Thursday began rolling out Windows 8.1 worldwide over the Internet.

Win 8.1 will be available Friday both preinstalled on new devices and on DVDs at retail locations worldwide.

This latest update to its flagship OS has improved multitasking, improved search, a redesigned Windows Store, and new and updated apps.

The Start button, which users have been clamoring for since Windows 8 was released, has been restored.

"Windows 8.1 makes several important changes to the way the product is used that could translate to more user acceptance -- or even see users embrace it," Al Hilwa, a program director at IDC, told TechNewsWorld.

There has been some criticism of the Start menu among early Win 8.1 users.

Another user, late_show, said the Windows Store app crashed in Metro, and pointed out that the Windows Store app's failure to work under Metro is a "common bug."

User pezzonovante complained that Win 8.1 would not download, and said the same problem cropped up with Windows 8.1 Preview.

UK user butlerat complained of getting a 403 response when clicking the link to upgrade.

India-based users Karthikeyanp and nitesh.luharuka complained they could not get the update, although the former managed to download it after a while.

What About the Apps?

Microsoft has added several new apps to the Win 8.1 ecosystem, and "they have made good progress, but Apple and Google still have an impressive app marketplace in comparison," suggested ESG's Bowker.

That situation might change over time.

"The long tail of apps will always go to the platform with the most units on the market," IDC's Hilwa pointed out. "As Windows touch devices make inroads in adoption, this will help the app ecosystem."

Going Into Businesses

The touch interface is likely to help drive Win 8 adoption in the enterprise, Bowker opined.

"There are also desktop management, security and access capabilities that get real interesting with Win 8, and the enterprise should look into them," he suggested.

Microsoft's problem is that Windows is trying to tackle both the mobile and enterprise segments with one OS, Roger Kay, founder and principal at Endpoint Technologies Associates, told TechNewsWorld.

"Windows 8 was serving legacy customers with backwards support, and the high-mobility world which is dominated by iOS and Android," Kay remarked.

Windows 8.1 continues to do so.

"To serve the lightweight world, you need something lightweight and fast, and to serve the legacy guys you need this deeply structured thing that has been around forever," Kay said.